There are definitely some real users here and there but do other people also see a plague of bot accounts that speak weird and push unusual agendas?
Maybe I am overreacting but one account was fixated on pushing that 60 was mid life with AI generated explanation and imbedded links and immediately deleted itself after I questioned if it was an AI chatbot.
I've noticed other accounts that over push international investments, mutual funds, crypto, not just on reddit but youtube, twitter, etc.
Their main triggers appear to be parroting quotes, hallucinating math, excessive imbedded links, and reacting poorly to being called out.
It just seems obvious to me if there are a lot of bot accounts on subreddits for selling commodities and goods like computers and referral links, there probably are a lot of stock market bots trying to bump traffic for certain parts of the market as well.
Am I accidentally bullying people or do other users see these unusual accounts as well trying to push an agenda?
Do you see a lot of bots giving financial advice?
byu/SerMumble ininvesting
Posted by SerMumble
9 Comments
Invest in responsible index funds. Beep boop. NFA.
Bad Bots
[removed]
Reposting this because it got automatically removed by a bot to further prove my point.
Original post slightly edited:
Reddit these days is 90% a mix of bots and [slow people]. You’d be a fool to interact with anything at face value.
Current [not smart] talking points are things like the dollar crumbling forever (easily checked against DXY as nonsense), the imminent crash/downfall of the US (posted every single year, almost never happens), positive China narratives about X thing that are absolute nonsense (robots, pollution, etc), Elon Musk being a [fool] that destroyed his companies (their stock price keeps going up), the list goes on.
I generally call them out as the absolute [deficient] they are, but they get angry and sometimes Reddit decides to take mod action or even admin action when it makes no sense. Absolute [terrible] website, but as you may know, if it’s free you are the product.
Still marginally useful for niche communities and the remaining 10%, at least for now.
Yeah honestly I think it’s getting worse.
Not even just obvious bots — more like accounts that sound *technically correct* but weirdly detached from real trading experience.
You’ll see very confident explanations, perfect wording, lots of links, but no discussion about execution, risk, drawdowns or actual decision making. Everything sounds clean on paper but disconnected from reality.
I don’t even think it’s always malicious. Some of it is probably AI-generated content farms trying to drive traffic or authority.
The irony is that markets punish theory very fast, so advice that hasn’t survived real constraints tends to stand out over time.
Personally I’ve started trusting posts that include uncertainty, mistakes or trade-offs way more than perfectly packaged answers.
Wasn’t only just me noticing
I disagree that its all bots… Now let me tell you why you should invest in lasagna.
The main subs on investing are all bots like 95%. And half of those are political brigading bots not connected to reality. I only stop by to know what the controlled bots are pushing so I can do my contrarian thing.
Dude, they’re everywhere on r/fire